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Re: [Full-Disclosure] M$ - so what should they do?



On Mon, 21 Jun 2004 18:55:55 EDT, joe <mvp@xxxxxxxxxxx>  said:

> You say you can use any editor to look at the config and you don't need a
> proprietary editor. What you mean is you can use any editor that uses the
> file system API to open and display the config files. With the registry you
> can you use any editor that uses the registry API to open and display the
> configurations. I have written several registry editor type apps for
> customers, it is simply another API. For me writing a text editor is the
> same as writing a registry editor, in fact, the classes I put together treat
> them both very similarly from code use perspective.

Well.. given that the file system API you need is basically open(), read(),
write(), close(), and maybe a few umask() and chmod() calls, plus any fcntl()
or similar locking for some of the files.  The bar is set *really* low here..

"any editor" really means *any* - vi, emacs, perl, awk - I've been forced into
using sed, ed, and cat on occasion if /usr isn't available, and even the shell
'echo' operator and >> redirection a few times... ;)

Of course, you're free to create your own API and classes on top of those very
low level pieces.... but there's no requirement that you do so.

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